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1. pdeuch+zb[view] [source] 2018-09-28 18:02:14
>>colone+(OP)
Said this yesterday in the other Facebook thread, and I'll say it again.

Working for Facebook is a morally bankrupt position. If you are an engineer you have plenty of job opportunities available to you and there is no excuse for you to continue contributing your labor and time to a wholly malignant organization. At a certain point one has to ask how we as an industry will start dealing with those who continue to take a paycheck from Facebook even in the face of constant and horrific evidence of wholesale ethical violations and negligence.

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2. jim777+Ew[view] [source] 2018-09-28 20:39:06
>>pdeuch+zb
Man this post made me angry.

Being human is a morally brankrupt position. Accumulating wealth is a morally brankrupt pastime.

If you want to be a morally pure human, starve yourself -- that's the only way.

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3. 1000un+Vy[view] [source] 2018-09-28 20:54:08
>>jim777+Ew
I've always liked this line, even after becoming quite wealthy:

And again I say to you: It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven. --Matthew 19:24

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4. dylan6+Xz[view] [source] 2018-09-28 21:04:31
>>1000un+Vy
When I first heard this as a kid, I immediately thought about a real life camel attempting to fit through the hole for thread in a sewing needle. That seemed like a very odd comparison as to who would try to do such an odd thing?

As an adult, I heard someone talk about one of the gates in the wall to Jerusalem was named the "eye of the needle" because of its shape. If a camel was loaded up that exceeded a certain height, the camel could not fit through the gate. It was this situation that the biblical passage was supposedly referring. So as with most things, context really helped. </random_tangent>

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5. swozey+XD[view] [source] 2018-09-28 21:43:00
>>dylan6+Xz
My understanding is that it's more hyperbolic than that. There are gates around Jerusalem called "Eye of the Needle" (St Alexander Nevskys Church for instance, its supposedly the location of a 1st century city wall) and a man can barely fit through these himself.

I could be totally wrong, of course. Maybe they started naming holes in dilapidated walls that to bring tourists/pilgrims.

Did a quick google for pic examples; https://patmcinerney.wordpress.com/2014/06/30/the-church-of-...

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